Below is a link to a video describing the development work
on an interesting concept for an antenna:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tIZUhu21sQ
RF
on an interesting concept for an antenna:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tIZUhu21sQ
RF
R. Fry said:Below is a link to a video describing the development work on an interesting concept for an antenna:
DanStrassberg said:Fascinating! He doesn't claim that the frequency range extends down to MW, however. 2 MHz is the lowest and requires a 70-80' column of water. I was envisioning fountains (as opposed to flagpoles) on a golf course. I believe that a long-dark AM 1540 in Aptos CA had a DA that consisted of three or four flagpoles on a golf course. I can just hear the consultant telling the applicant, "No, it has never been tried as far as I know, but let's run it up the flagpole..." AFAIK, the FCC has never approved Valcom Fibreglass whips for use in AM DAs, but didn't those flagpoles on that CA golf course have to be constructed more or less like Valcom whips?
w9wi said:What's a quarter-wave on 1540, about 150'? That'd be a pretty big flagpole, but there's an auto dealership 20 miles north of here that's got a few I believe are that big.
DanStrassberg said:However, Valcom whips have a greater electrical length than you would predict from their physical length--and there are valid technical reasons for the seemingly anomalous electrical length. The antenna is helically wound on the Fibreglass core. As a result, the antenna is a transmission line with series inductance and shunt capacitance, which produce a propagation velocity lower than that of free space.
R. Fry said:John Kraus in Antennas for All Applications, 3rd edition states that a vertical monopole antenna utilizing a helical conductor has nearly the same radiation resistance as a linear conductor of the same height
DanStrassberg said:Valcom has been very reticent about developing larger sizes. I don't know anything about the structural issues, which must be significant--Valcom whips are self supporting and are WAY narrower at the base than any conventional self-supporting tower of similar height. But if the structural issues can be solved at reasonable cost, it might be possible to design a whip that is (just barely) shorter than 200' and thus would not require illumination in the US and would also work all the way down to 540 kHz, the lowest AM frequency in the US. You just know that Valcom MUST have worked on such a whip and the fact that they don't offer one suggests that they could not overcome the structural problems or could not do so at a price they thought anyone would be willing to pay.
DanStrassberg said:However, Valcom whips have a greater electrical length than you would predict from their physical length--and there are valid technical reasons for the seemingly anomalous electrical length.
Valcom has been very reticent about developing larger sizes. I don't know anything about the structural issues, which must be significant--Valcom whips are self supporting and are WAY narrower at the base than any conventional self-supporting tower of similar height. But if the structural issues can be solved at reasonable cost, it might be possible to design a whip that is (just barely) shorter than 200' and thus would not require illumination in the US and would also work all the way down to 540 kHz, the lowest AM frequency in the US. You just know that Valcom MUST have worked on such a whip and the fact that they don't offer one suggests that they could not overcome the structural problems or could not do so at a price they thought anyone would be willing to pay.
DanStrassberg said:But there is no indication that the helical antenna in the Kraus reference is wound on a core having a dielectric constant higher than that of free space. That is the case with the Valcom whip. <earlier> Supposedly, the 94' whip at 1200 has a radiation efficiency equal to that of a 60-degree antenna of conventional design. A 60-degree antenna at 1200 would be 137' high and, with a ground system consisting of 120 1/4-wavelegth radials, should have an efficiency just slightly greater than the Class B/D AM minimum, so you can calculate the propagation velocity in the whip as being 94/137 or 68.8% of that of free space.
R. Fry said:For consideration... Dr. George H. Brown investigated the performance of reduced-velocity monopoles for his paper A Critical Study of the Characteristics of Broadcast Antennas as Affected by Antenna Current Distribution, which was published in the Proceedings of the I.R.E. in January, 1936.
DanStrassberg said:But the actual behavior of the Valcom whips, which has been confirmed by numerous proofs of performance, suggests that Valcom's assertion of reduced propagation velocity is valid.... Could these lumped loads be Valcom's "secret sauce"? Or are you suggesting that the proofs of performance on the whips were inaccurate or falsified?
kenglish said:All this takes me back to my 1960's high school days, and the "Popular Science" article about using an ionized flame to create a speaker.
Did it ever take off? ;D
R. Fry said:A reduced v/c for the Valcom is not mentioned there as a contributor to efficiency. Is there a link to a paper showing this?--RF
DanStrassberg said:R. Fry said:A reduced v/c for the Valcom is not mentioned there as a contributor to efficiency. Is there a link to a paper showing this?--RF
The reference to a paper must be in the caption of one of the figures on the page to which you provided a link. I don't remember the paper's title, but I do remember the date: January, 1936.
frankberry said:Ionic Liquid antenna wouldn't work too well in the wind.